Hogarth
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Hogarth
(Art & ideas)
Phaidon, 2000
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
William Hogarth (1697-1764) is certainly one of the most versatile, innovative and celebrated of all British artists. He lived at a time when Britain was emerging as an increasingly urbanized, commercialized and aggressively imperial power. Like many other artists, he exploited and benefited from these changes in British society. Among his contemporaries, it was Hogarth who commented most brilliantly on society - both positively and negatively. His work celebrates the benefits of commerce, politeness and patriotism while simultaneously focusing on the corruption, hypocrisy and prejudice they brought in their wake.
In paint and in print we are shown the two contrasting sides of modernity. This book explores and explains the dramatic duality within Hogarth's work, and in doing so gives us a greater sense of the contradictions and complexities that existed within eighteenth-century British society.
Table of Contents
- Introduction - "the highest and lowest life"
- ink - carving out a career
- paint - talking pictures
- sex, disease and pity - "A Harlot's Progress"
- satire and the city - the painter of modern London
- charity and community - at St. Bartholomew's and The Foundling Hospital
- foreign affairs - "Marriage A-La-Mode"
- black and white - from "Industry and Idleness" to "The Four Stages of Cruelty"
- design for life - "The Analysis of Beauty"
- faction - art, politics and propaganda
- exposure and retreat - the final years
- afterlife - re-inventing.
by "Nielsen BookData"